SportFootballFIFAEngland's first goal against Norway in the World Cup was right to be allowed following an in-depth FIFA review into several different angles15:15, 13 Jul 2026Updated 15:37, 13 Jul 2026FIFA were right to not intervene and disallow England's controversial first goal against Norway with new evidence of several camera angles showing that the spidercam cables were not struck.‌Norway and goalkeeper Orjan Nyland were adamant that the trajectory of his goal kick was altered which allowed Elliot Anderson to pluck the ball from the sky under minimal pressure and feed Anthony Gordon who in turn got the assist for Jude Bellingham's goal.‌According to The Daily Mail, FIFA have reviewed multiple other angles which show the ball took a natural flight path. A video directly from the spidercam itself has also been looked at with it clear there no 'wobble' in the footage, and thus the ball had no impact with any cables.‌Their report has also stated that though the angle of the ball does appear to change, footage from a side-angle actually shows that the ball had a smooth arc and naturally dipped after reaching its peak.FIFA released a statement in the immediate aftermath confirming that there was no peak in the heartbeat sensor of the ball.Get the latest World Cup news straight to your inbox by _signing up to our Make Football Great Again newsletter now!‌The heartbeat sensor was used to disallow Croatia's last-gasp equaliser against Portugal due to an offside following a slight touch on the ball in the build up.Despite the evidence, Norway were far from pleased by the decision to allow the goal with Sander Berge, Andreas Schjelderup and manager Stale Solbakken all making their displeasure clear.The former said: "It's ridiculous, this one with the wire, 2-1 says itself - there are small margins and we know which way it went."‌Schjelderup, who scored for Norway, went one further and told TV2: "You see that the ball changes direction and lands ten meters earlier. I haven't seen the pictures again, but if it hit, it's a scandal."Solbakken acknowledged FIFA's evidence but was still not exactly pleased as he was of the belief that there was a clear change of direction.‌He said: "Many on the bench reacted immediately I was not one of them. I can't say anything about that because FIFA, if there is no sound in the chip, what can I say against that."The ball drops straight down from heaven. I saw another way just then so I also don't know what happened. I think it's pretty clear that it did and yeah, it was a strange thing."There was far less controversy surrounding Bellingham's second goal with that coming in extra-time and taking England to the World Cup semi-finals where they will face Argentina.Article continues belowJoin our new WhatsApp community and receive your daily dose of Mirror Football content. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice.Content cannot be displayed without consentChoose Daily Mirror as a 'Preferred Source' on Google News for quick access to the news you value.‌FIFAEngland football teamJude BellinghamWorld Cup 2026